Title: Medical care to Paralympic Athletes
1Medical care to Paralympic Athletes
- Dr I. Stuart Miller Dip Sport Med FFSEM(UK)
- Clinical director
- Bath University Sport and Exercise Medicine
- CMO ParalympicsGB
2Disability Hide away or celebrate talent
- It is impossible to change everyone's
perceptions on the subject of disabled sport - Daily Telegraph journalistGareth A Davies
- Care of Paralympic athletes is it rocket
science or just a need to explore perceptions?
3Paralympic games a rationale
- The Paralympic Games are a powerful demonstration
of the vitality and achievements of disabled
persons world-wide - -Kofi Annan, United Nations Ex-Secretary General
(letter dated 7 September 2004
4Paralympic athletes role models and ambassadors
- The Paralympics are one of the worlds most
prominent events where people with disabilities
show their tremendous talent and energy. We take
this opportunity to admire the skill and
determination of these athletes, but at the same
time we must reflect upon the fact that globally,
too many people with disabilities do not enjoy
even the most basic human right. - -Dr. Etienne Krug, Director of the WHO
Department of Injuries and Violence
Prevention,International Paralympic Symposium on
Disability Rights
5History of the Paralympic Games
- 1948 Guttmans Stoke Mandeville Games in the UK
taking part - 1960 First Paralympic games in Rome with 23
countries and 400 athletes - 1988 First true linked Modern Paralympic games in
the same venue as the Olympic Games (Seoul) - 2000 Sydney Paralympics 127 countries and 4000
athletes took part with global TV coverage of
1.1billion. (except the USA!)
6The increasing Global participation
- 2004 Paralympic games
- Cumulative TV audience worldwide 1.862 billion
- IPC revenue in 2004 was 4.67million
- IPC annual report 2004
- 2008 Paralympics
- 140 countries
- Global cumulative audience of 3.8billion
- IPC Press release -9.12.08
Number of countries
Number of competitors
7The sports and classification within Paralympic
sports
8The Paralympic summer sports programs
- Archery
- Athletics (track and field)
- Boccia
- Cycling
- Equestrian
- Football 5-a-side
- Football 7-a-side
- Goalball
- Judo
- Powerlifting
- Rowing
- Sailing
- Shooting
- Swimming
- Table Tennis
- Volleyball (sitting)
- Wheelchair basketball
- Wheelchair fencing
- Wheelchair rugby
- Wheelchair tennis
9Disability Groups
- Based on historical precedence and sport
development - Wheelchair athletes/Spinal injured
- Cerebral palsy
- Blind or visually impaired
- Amputees
- Les Autres
- Intellectual disability (suspended)
- Deaf (Not part of the Paralympic movement)
- There is likely to be significant change either
very soon for London 2012 or in time for 2016
ability based
10Classification- setting a level playing field
- Comparison with able bodied classification- eg
boxing weights/age/experience - Classification considered by each sport as either
- Disability specific
- e.g. athletics
- Involves a structured assessment blind, amputee
lower limb etc - Functional classification
- swimming
- static and dynamic evaluation- apparently
different disabilities within classifications - Confirmed (C), Review (R) or New (N)
classification
11Limitation to classification
- General public do not understand
- Banding is either
- too broad to allow some to compete on a level
playing field - Too narrow creating too many categories
- Complex to manage, open to abuse? If challenged
may result in a good athlete/medal potential
being unable to qualify in a more difficult
category - Where possible it should be functional and not
alterable by training. - Consideration should also be given to equipment
to prevent technology wins cf F1 racing.
12Specific medical issues with disability groups
13What should we expect when treating disabled
athletes?
- The great worry amongst therapists and doctors is
that injuries and illness will be very high or
unduly complex - injury rates are broadly comparable to able
bodied counterparts at 9.1/1000 - Patterns of injury vary a little with the
different sports - more upper limb injuries in wheelchair users
- increase in lower limb trauma in visually
impaired athletes - Ferrara MS and Connie L. Peterson CL Injuries to
Athletes With Disabilities - Identifying Injury
Patterns Sports Med 2000 Aug 30 (2) 137-143 - FerraraMS,Buckley WE. Athletes with disabilities
injury registry. Adapt Phys Act Q 1996 13 50-60
14Musculo-skeletal Injuries
- Nick Webborn BPA data on file Athens
Paralympics
15Illness in Disability athletes
- Can be a little more challenging sometimes due to
co-morbidities e.g. - Epilepsy in CP
- Pressure sore management
- UTI
- Autonomic dysfunction
- Nick Webborn BPA data on file
16Specific problems encountered in disability groups
- Spinal injured
- Cerebral palsy
- Amputee athletes
- Visually impaired
17Spinal Lesion
- Cause- an insult that affects the functioning of
the nerves of the spinal column - congenital problems such as
- Spina bifida or
- acquired injury such as
- Spinal injury fracture / dislocation (rugby
diving RTA - Transverse myelitis
- Tumour
- Infection
- Polio
18Spinal Injury
19Causes of Spinal Injury
20Defining Injury Level
- Complete or incomplete?
- ASIA classification (American spinal injuries
Association ) - Quadriplegiatetraplegia
- A-D (A complete D power 3/5)
21Spinal Cord Injured Athletes
- Motor loss
- Sensory loss
- Pressure sores
- Lack of awareness of injury
- care when transferring
- Loss of autonomic control
- Bladder
- Bowel
- Sweating
- Effects on cardiac function in exercise
- (T1-4 sympathectomises)
- Respiratory function
- Temperature control
- Dehydration
- UTI / stones
- Autonomic dysreflexia (at or above T6)
22Dysreflexia
- Sensory (pain) impulses enter the cord below
lesion and sympathetic nervous system responds to
local spinal reflexes with an excessive discharge
which is uncorrected by feedback loop.
BP
HR
23Signs Symptoms
- Pounding headache.
- Nasal congestion.
- Blurred vision.
- Appearance of spots in the patient's visual
fields. - Profuse sweating and flushing of the skin above
the level of the lesion, especially in the face,
neck, and shoulders, or possibly below the level
of the lesion.
- Bradycardia
- Elevated blood pressure
- Cardiac arrhythmias, atrial fibrillation,
premature ventricular contractions, and
atrioventricular conduction abnormalities. - Piloerection or goose bumps above or possibly
below the level of the lesion.
24Why is it important?
- Autonomic dysreflexia has been regarded as a
medical emergency because of the severe rises in
blood pressure that can occur with recorded
values in excess of 300 mmHg. - Reported complications in the medical literature
include seizures, cerebral haemorrhage, cardiac
arrhythmia and death. - In the hospital setting it is treated as a
medical emergency.
25Causes of Autonomic Dysreflexia
- Intentional
- Clamping catheter.
- Tight leg straps.
- Genital trauma.
- Prolonged sitting in racing chair.
- Unintentional
- UTI
- Blocked catheter
- Constipation
- Urinary calculi
- Anal fissure
- Skin infection or injury
- Pressure area
26Boosting
- The practice of precipitating a dysreflexic state
by noxious stimuli - Perceived increase in exercise capability.
- Belief that boosted state could be controlled.
- Treadmill exercise capability improved.
- Increase in simulated race times of 9.7 in
boosted state. - Burnham et al. Clin. J. Sports
Med. Vol.4 1994. - Equivalent in able-bodied performance
- 1 second off 100m record.
- 4 seconds off 400m record.
- 12 minutes off marathon record.
27Managing thermoregulation in Spinal Cord Injury
- Above the lesion
- sweating may be excessive (Sweat rate above level
of lesion - can increase x 6) - Drips off - ineffective for heat loss
- Below the lesion
- Basal sweat rate is unaffected by activity or
ambient temperature
Level of lesion
28Risks of heat to Wheelchair Athletes
- Increases in core temperature up to 40.5 deg.
- Increases in heart rate.
- Risk of dehydration still likely to occur.
- Risk of heat illness increased and impairment of
athletic performance. - Most affected athletes Tetras (high lesion)
29Managing thermoregulation
- Hydration strategies
- pre-cooling strategies
- interventions during competition
- Cooling vests, head and hand emersion, use of fans
30Time to Exhaustion
31Core Temperature
32Risks in cold environments
- Inability to shiver below spinal lesion
- Lack of locomotor effort
- Lack of feeling in peripheries may lead to cold
injury - Difficulty changing in and out of cold weather
gear
33Other Factors Limiting Performance of spinal
injured athletes
- May be peripheral rather than central
- Local fatigue despite sufficient availability of
blood and O2 -muscle fatigue in muscles not
designed for endurance exercise. - Inadequate venous return of blood to the heart
due to deficient skeletal muscle pump activity
and impaired sympathetic vasoregulation - SCI T1-4 or above - sympathectomised myocardium.
HR max 110-130 - Unopposed sympathetic input may cause relative
bronchospasm
34Wheelchair use
- Type of wheelchair- sports design
- Disabled facilities- is wheelchair access
available? - Propulsion issues
- Injury specific patterns
35Influence of disability on propulsion
- Lower spinal cord injury
- Higher position
- Ability to flex and extend trunk
- High thoracic injury
- Lower flexed position
- Inability to extend trunk
- wheelchair racing
- Fencing
36Amputee or Limb Deficiency
- Congenital e.g. developmental
- or
- Acquired
- Disease e.g. tumour, vascular disease
- Trauma RTA, workplace injury
37Amputees
- Can compete with or without prosthesis or in
wheelchair
38Amputee Considerations
- Alignment
- Impact loading on stump prosthesis interface
- Choke syndrome- venous pooling
- Residual limb problems- overuse injury muscle
imbalance - Biomechanical issues (prosthetic limb may be made
short to allow easier toe clearance) - Phantom limb pain
- Technology development and costs
- Is the technology too good to compete with able
bodied athletes?
39Oscar Pistorius and cheetahs- media hype or real
opportunity?
- Oscar Pistorius was ruled ineligible to compete
at the Olympic Games because his prosthetic limbs
give him an unfair advantage. - Their statement said the double amputee's
"cheetah" blades were technical aids in clear
contravention of IAAF rules, effectively banning
the South African, 21, from competing against
able-bodied athletes. - Times online 14 Jan 2008
- Successful appeal proved there was no benefit
when comparing pre and post injury athletes and
rates of exhaustion/VO2Max
40Cerebral Palsy
- A non-progressive but not unchanging disorder of
movement and/or posture, due to an insult or
anomaly of the developing brain. - Classification can be according to the type of
movement disorder and/or by the number of limbs
affected.
41Classification
- Movement Disorder
- Spastic cerebral palsy
- Choreo-Athetoid cerebral palsy
- Mixed-type cerebral palsy
- The classifications of movement disorder and
number of limbs involved are usually combined
(e.g. spastic diplegia). - Half compete in wheelchairs
42Cerebral Palsy Sport
- Common problems
- Prejudice and misconception
- Co-morbidity
- epilepsy
- visual defects
- deafness
- intellectual impairment
- Spasticity
- Dependency and psychology (not often in elite
sport!) - Issues around spasticity, training and
classification
- Common sports
- CP athletics track and field
- CP football
- Boccia
- Cycling
43Physical interventions
- Reduce excessive muscle tone
- Maintain or improve range of movement and
mobility - Increase strength and co-ordination
- Improve comfort.
- Stretching to maintain the full ROM of a joint,
keeping it mobile. - Strengthening Spasticity often leads to loss of
strength in both the spastic muscles and
surrounding ones.
44To treat or not to treat in CP
- The temptation is to correct abnormality
- Increased tone in one area may improve stability
- Classification issues more significant and
controversial
45Visually Impaired
- Injuries commonly related to falls (PWC)
- Unfamiliar environments when competing
- May require able bodied guides.
- Difficulty monitoring fluid balance
- Sports
- Track and field athletics
- Goalball
- VI/Blind football
- Judo
- Cycling
- Swimming
46Les Autres
- Congenital disorders - e.g. spondylo-epiphyseal
dysplasia, Stickler syndrome - Limb deficiencies
- Muscular dystrophies
- MS
- Ankylosis or arthritis of major joints
- Choice of sport
- dependant on disability
47The role of the medical team
48Medical team role
- Treatment of acute injuries and illnesses
- Managing ongoing medical illness and disability
- Manage psychological aspects of performance
- Maximise potential for performance
- Monitor and evaluate interventions and potential
problems - Minimise the effects of travel and competition
abroad
49The Paralympic perspective on medical care
- The athletes have a disability
- Co-morbidities eg epilepsy
- Managing spinal injury complications such as
dysreflexia and thermoregulation - Knowledge of biomechanics as applied to
wheelchair athletes and others eg amputees - Managing prejudice and misconceptions.
- Managing success and failure
50Medical Team - Use of Time
N.Webborn Athens 2004
51Travelling with Athletes with a disability
52Travel Problems
- Pressure sores
- Dehydration (may lead to UTI)
- DVT
- Epilepsy
- Oedema
- Autonomic dysreflexia
- Time zone issues bowel regimes, blind (how
does this affect jetlag) - Loss of normal support network
53Travelling with a team- Getting on a plane
- Are there enough staff to assist at the airport
with luggage and equipment? - Extra luggage including wheelchairs (both day to
day and competition chairs) - Moving around in the cabin to address issues
such as going to the toilet? - Choice of seat.
- Number of wheelchair users
- Is there a plan what to do about bladder care
needs? - Is the athlete fluid restricting as it is
difficult to move around and they may be trying
to avoid the need to go to the toilet. (Thus
increasing the risk of urinary tract infection)
54In the host country
- Is there adapted transport?
- Is the environment suitable for the disabled?
- Is there an acceptance of disability within the
society? - Is the infrastructure suitable for athletes with
a disability? Are hospitals equipped to deal with
spinal injured patients understanding the need
for pressure area care etc? - Are the competition or training venues
accessible?
55At the hotel
- Is the hotel appropriately equipped to deal with
disability athletes? - Wheelchair users needs,
- Reduced lower limb mobility eg amputees or
cerebral palsy - Visually impaired
- Are there suitable facilities in the room to
allow for space to move in a wheelchair or attend
to bathroom needs?
56Travelling with visually impaired athletes
- Is the hotel room easy to find?
- Consider signage in Braille or other low vision
aids to augment the hotel signage where needed - Carry out a sighted walk through the hotel and
surroundings to identify risks. This may include
high visibility strips on steps, signage to alert
of obstruction, or even removing decorative
plant pots from corridors! - Ensure obstructions in hotel rooms are kept to a
minimum - Ensure the support team are all aware, willing to
help and know how to guide the visually impaired.
57Summary
- Paralympic sport is to me awe inspiring and a
privilege to work with. - Disability brings its own challenges to both the
athlete and the medical teams - Managing medical aspects of disability is not
difficult but requires a good depth of knowledge
of biomechanics, medicine, psychology and general
sports medicine - Also a sense of humour and an understanding of
the athlete and what it means to have both a
disability and a skill.
58Thank you